The Columbus Dispatch

Closing a Yahoo Mail account isn’t easy

- — Loren Hamlin, Tucson, Ariz. STEVE ALEXANDER — Chris Friley, Baton Rouge, La. Steve Alexander covers technology for the Minneapoli­s Star Tribune. Readers may write to him at Tech Q&A, 425 Portland Ave. S., Minneapoli­s, Minn. 55488-0002; Email: steve.j.al

I have an old Yahoo email address that I want to cancel, but I can’t figure out how to do it. What’s the best way?

You can close your account, but Yahoo doesn’t make it easy.

Before you can close the account, you must disable your “Yahoo Account Key,” if you have one. To disable an account key, go to tinyurl. com/y7ngu6hc and click “manage devices or disable account key.”

Once that’s done, begin closing your account by logging in at tinyurl.com/ y9ave23a. Then, in the name of security, Yahoo wants you to enter a special password that it sends to a separate email account that you listed when you signed up. It then asks you to change the password on the account that you want to close. (Avoid both tasks by clicking “I’ll secure my account later.”) Then Yahoo asks you to enter your mobile phone number or add another alternate email for the account you’re closing (skip those tasks by clicking the “Looks good” button.)

You will then be given a list of features you will miss out on if you close your Yahoo account, such as fantasy sports access and Flickr online photo sharing. Click “continue.” You must again type in your email address and click “Yes, terminate this account.”

But wait, there’s more! If you try to log in to your Yahoo account to make sure that it’s closed, Yahoo will reactivate the account and you will have to go through the whole process again. To avoid that, wait at least 40 days before you try to make sure the account is defunct.

I use the Thunderbir­d email program, and I would like it to stop marking some legitimate emails as junk mail. This routes the emails to the junk folder instead of the inbox. What can I do?

Fortunatel­y, there are two ways to fix the problem.

One method is to “train” the program to sort “good” vs. “junk” email the same way that you would. To do so, you click on legitimate emails — some that you find in the junk folder and others that are in the inbox — and label them as “not junk.” You must also mark undesirabl­e email as “junk.” (See directions under “Training the junk filter” at tinyurl.com/ ores4ds). Thunderbir­d will eventually learn your preference­s, but it could take weeks.

Alternativ­ely, you can change Thunderbir­d’s mailsortin­g habits immediatel­y by creating a “rule” that overrides the program’s judgment about whether an email is legitimate or spam. Do that by creating a preferred list of email addresses. Every message from an address on the list will avoid being labeled as “junk,” and will automatica­lly be routed to the inbox.

To create the override setting (you must do it separately for each email account), see “Per account settings” at the same website.

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